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Credit Karma
creditkarma.com › credit-cards
Best Credit Cards | January 2026
3 weeks ago - How to find the best credit card for you The best credit card for you is one that fits your needs, not just the card that offers the most features. When you compare cards, think about your spending habits and credit situation. Are you willing to pay an annual fee?
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NerdWallet
nerdwallet.com › back to nerdwallet homepage › credit cards › best credit cards of january 2026
Best Credit Cards - January 2026 - NerdWallet
2 weeks ago - NerdWallet's credit card experts have reviewed and rated hundreds of options for the best credit cards of 2025 – from generous rewards and giant sign-up bonuses to long 0% APR periods and credit-building help, so you can find the best fit for your needs.
People also ask

What Is the Most Popular Credit Card?
With over 149 million credit cards in circulation, Chase is outpacing competitors. The closest bank behind it is Capital One with about 106 million credit cards in circulation. Looking at Chase, your most popular cards are going to be the Chase Sapphire Preferred Card for travel and the Chase Freedom Unlimited for cash back.


Considering Capital One, your most popular credit cards are going to the be the Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card for travel and the Capital One Savor Cash Rewards Credit Card for cash back.
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money.usnews.com
money.usnews.com › home › credit cards › best credit cards
Best Credit Cards of December 2025 | U.S. News
What Is the Best Credit Card Issuer?
Cards from many credit card issuers make the U.S. News Best Credit Cards list. The best credit card for you depends on factors including your credit score and whether you are interested in rewards. You can check a company's ratings with the Better Business Bureau and Trustpilot and search for it in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Consumer Complaint Database to get a sense of its reputation.


Keep in mind that credit card issuers are the companies that provide cards, while credit card networks authorize and process credit card payments. The payment networks are Visa, Mastercard, Discover and American Express. Note that Discover and American Express are both credit card issuers and credit card networks.
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money.usnews.com
money.usnews.com › home › credit cards › best credit cards
Best Credit Cards of December 2025 | U.S. News
What Is the Easiest Credit Card to Get?
Secured credit cards, student credit cards, store credit cards and alternative credit cards are the easiest cards to get for consumers with bad credit or no credit.
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money.usnews.com
money.usnews.com › home › credit cards › best credit cards
Best Credit Cards of December 2025 | U.S. News
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › recommendations on credit cards
r/CreditCards on Reddit: Recommendations on credit cards
December 1, 2024 -

I need help figuring out what credit card works best for me and my situation. I don't have much knowledge when it comes to credit cards. I tend to look for advice on different cards then get overwhelmed and end up not applying at all.

Some background info: I am 23 years old, work full-time, and am debt-free. I currently live at home (pay no rent), only pay the phone bill, and travel about 2-3 times a year (hoping to do it more often). I live in a small town. I have a bank account through my local bank and savings through Discover. I have a large amount saved in my savings account (if that plays into my income). I applied for a rewards credit card through my bank in April and was declined. I don't mind paying a credit card annual fee if I get good enough rewards.

Current cards:

  • Visa Platinum College Real Rewards Card $1000 (I was approved of a credit limit increase as of 12/1 after updating my income), August 2020

  • FICO Score: 728

  • Oldest account age: 4 years and 3 months

  • Chase 5/24 status: 0/24

  • Income: 80,000 (gross) and 58,000 (net)

  • Average monthly spend and categories:

    • dining $200-400

    • groceries: $300 (I tend to shop at Walmart and Hy-vee)

    • gas: $60

    • travel: $50-100

    • shopping: $500

    • pet bills: $60

    • phone bill: $100

  • Open to Business Cards: e.g. No

  • What's the purpose of your next card? Travel, Cashback

    • Capital One Venture Rewards or Capital One Venture X

    • Chase Freedom Unlimited

    • Chase Sapphire Preferred

    • American Express Gold Card

  • Are you OK with category spending or do you want a general spending card? I would want a general spending card. I want to transition from using my debit card to using a credit card for its perks.

I am open to hearing any thoughts on my situation and would be grateful for any recommendations! TYIA!

Edit:

Capital One: pre-approved for Quicksilver Rewards, Savor Rewards, Venture Rewards, VentureOne Rewards, Platinum Mastercard, and Venture X.

Chase: pre-approved for Chase Freedom Flex, Chase Freedom Unlimited, Chase Slate Edge, Chase Sapphire Preferred, Chase Sapphire Reserve, Southwest Rapid Rewards Plus, and United Explorer Card.

American Express: pre-approved for American Express Gold.

Top answer
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There are 3 major credit card issuers tthat will earn you the best value for travelling with points and miles. Choose one of the issuers and combine points. Or you can start your journey with multiple of them. CHASE - This is hands down, one of the best credit card issuer and their credit card set up is easy to follow and also called as Chase trifecta in the industry. Here's how I would go about getting these cards: I would say start with Chase Freedom Flex which gives you 5% in rotating quarterly categories (dining, gas, grocery, amazon, etc) And then get Chase Freedome Unlimited which would give you 1.5% on every pther purchase. Both of them comes with a sign up bonus of $200 (equals to 20,000 chase points) after spending $500. Currently, Freedom unlimited has an offer of 25,000 points or $250. Do not spend these points on cashback and try to save them better value with my next suggestion. Finally get a annual fee credit card called Chase Saphhire Preferred ($95) or Chase Saphhire Reserve ($550). They have a standard sign up bonus of 60,000 points but I have seen offers upto 80,000 points. They provide a statement credit of $50 and $250 respectively towards travel to offset the annual fee. You can combine the points on your other cards to this premium card and spend them on travelling. It will be a total of (20,000+20,000+60,000) 100,000 points. So now, if you have the Chase Sapphire preferred, your 100,000 points are worth $1,250 towards travel (1.25 cent = 1 point). If you have Chase sapphire reserve, your 100,000 points are worth $1,500 towards travel (1.5 cent = 1 point). You can also make more value out of them by transferring them to airlines or hotels like Hyatt. These points figures above are just purely from sign up bonus. You will be earning more from using right credit card according to their spending categories and making even more points. That would be a lot of travellinf and great value. If you want to know more about American Express and Capital One card setup. Lmk, I can write a similar reply for them too. Capital One has a real good and almost one of the most best-value card set up if you want to travel more. Amex is awesome too, but I just place them down because of their high annual fees. But, you can still make a good value out of them despite the big sticker price.
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Your existing card gives 1.5% cashback, which is a start. Any rent? What Capital One cards do you pre-approve for? General pre-approval: https://www.capitalone.com/credit-cards/preapprove/ Venture X-specific pre-approval: https://www.capitalone.com/credit-cards/preapprove/venture-x I am skeptical you’d be pre-approved for Venture X — it requires a minimum $10K CL — but your pre-approval results through both tools would give us a better feel for how your credit profile is evaluating.
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CNBC
cnbc.com › cnbc select › credit cards › best credit cards to help you meet your new year’s resolutions
Best credit cards to help you meet your New Year’s resolutions
20 hours ago - Best for paying down debt: U.S. Bank Shield™ Visa® Card · Best for reading more: Prime Visa (see rates and fees) Best for new experiences: Chase Sapphire Reserve® (see rates and fees) Best for self-care: Wells Fargo Attune℠ World Elite ...
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Chase
creditcards.chase.com
Credit Cards - Compare Credit Card Offers and Apply Online | Chase
Explore all of Chases credit card offers for personal use and business. Find the best rewards cards, travel cards, and more. Apply today and start earning rewards and cash back.
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CreditCards.com
creditcards.com
Credit cards: Find the Right Card For You at Creditcards.com
Find the best credit cards by comparing a variety of offers for balance transfers, rewards, low interest, and more. Apply online at CreditCards.com.
Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › what are your favorite credit cards and why?
r/CreditCards on Reddit: What are your favorite credit cards and why?
November 27, 2025 -

Since Discover was bought by Capital One, I've been debating on opening a second credit card. I have a Discover It card and have had it since 2017. I'll keep it but I probably won't use it much anymore. What are some other good rewards cards without annual fees?

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U.S. News
money.usnews.com › home › credit cards › best credit cards
Best Credit Cards of December 2025 | U.S. News
1 week ago - Blue Cash Everyday® Card from American Express: Best feature: Earn up to 3% cash back in select categories, up to an annual maximum. IHG One Rewards Traveler Credit Card: Best feature: Earn up to 17 points per dollar on IHG purchases.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › what credit cards are you actually keeping long-term, and why?
r/CreditCards on Reddit: What credit cards are you actually keeping long-term, and why?
November 8, 2025 -

I feel like I’m always switching cards chasing points, cash back, or sign-up bonuses, but I’m wondering, what cards do people actually stick with for years?

For context, I travel a couple times a year, like some dining perks, and care about no foreign transaction fees. I’ve tried a few premium rewards cards, but I often end up not using all the perks.

Which cards have you found worth holding onto, even after the initial bonuses are gone? What makes them worth it for you?

Top answer
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74
Pretty much every card I have right now. They are all no AF cashback cards (+ the savor). Since I’m still young, these will be my oldest lines of credit and I want to make sure I never have to cancel them. •Elan Max Cash - 5% on utilities. I own my house. Seems like a no brainer to have a (x2) 5% category selector card that auto resets your categories. Literally never do anything for this card. Utilities on autopay, card on autopay, I get auto paid. Never cancelling •Apple Card - probably my worst card, but still free, and I’m deeply invested in the Apple ecosystem, so it is alright I guess. Best UI of any card out there hands down. I got it when it could get 3% on tap and 5% on Apple, then I didn’t even get to use the card before they nerfed it. •Fidelity Visa: I love this card. Everyone under the age of ≈45 should get this card. Not only is it a 2% card that can pay anything no questions asked (I use it for taxes), but it also encourages good saving habits. Credit cards are not the only part of finance you should be educated in, and Fidelity is a great business to be a customer of. •Savor - I don’t spend enough money on food to break-even with the gold card yet. + CapitalOne won’t give you any cards if you have too many from other issuers, so it’s good to crack into the Cap1 ecosystem early. •My next card is probably going to be the AMEX Blue Cash Preferred. I have Disney+ so it’s literally free money, + it’s really solid outside of that considering the AF is paid for by the Disney credit
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I use all my cards tbh. Some more than others, but all used. -Discover IT is great for the rotating 5% categories. Especially when they’re restaurants, wholesale clubs (I do my grocery shopping at Walmart), and Amazon. -Apple Card is basically at 2% catch all that allows you to do interest free financing on apple products and gives you the ability to use apple’s savings. -Citibank Double Cash is another 2% catch all with less perks than Apple, but I use when Apple Pay isn’t accepted. -Wells Fargo Autograph is great for travel and gas (3x points). And now their points are 1:1 with Jetblue. -Chase Sapphire Preferred opens up the exporting of points from Chase and gets 3X points on dining. Chase absolutely has the best partners, so I’m even considering a Chase FU for an upcoming $$$ purchase.
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Mastercard
mastercard.com › us › en › personal › find-a-card › credit-card › credit-type › excellent-credit.html
Credit Cards for Excellent Credit - Mastercard
Find credit cards from Mastercard for people with excellent credit. Compare credit cards from our partners, view offers and apply online for the card that is the best fit for you.
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Yahoo! Finance
finance.yahoo.com › personal-finance › credit-cards
Latest credit card rates, reviews, & comparisons - Yahoo Finance
November 13, 2025 - Earn a $250 statement credit after you spend $3,000 in eligible purchases on your new Card within the first 6 months · The Amex Blue Cash Preferred has one of the highest cash-back rates available for making purchases in common spending categories, especially for a low-annual-fee card. This is an excellent card if you want to turn your everyday purchases into valuable cash-back rewards. ... Our best credit card picks are based on a series of rubrics developed by our credit card experts.
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Forbes Advisor
forbes.com › advisor › credit-cards
Credit Cards – Forbes Advisor
While no single credit card is the best option for every family, purchase or budget, the experts on our credit cards team set out to crunch the numbers to find the top cards for various needs.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › best and worst credit card blogs of 2025 (us focus)
r/CreditCards on Reddit: Best and Worst Credit Card Blogs of 2025 (US Focus)
2 weeks ago -

The Winner: Frequent Miler

Frequent Miler takes the crown for 2025, and it is not particularly close. What sets them apart is their commitment to maintaining editorial integrity in an industry drowning in affiliate relationships. Their analysis cuts through the marketing fluff that plagues so many other sites.

Their strength lies in several areas. First, they consistently break news about upcoming card refreshes and program changes, often with insider details you will not find elsewhere.When Chase refreshed the Sapphire Reserve benefits or Amex reduced transfer ratios to their airline partners, Frequent Miler was there with clear, unbiased analysis of what it meant for cardholders.

Second, their willingness to reach out directly to card issuers for clarification on confusing terms or policy changes demonstrates real journalism rather than just regurgitating press releases. They ask the tough questions and publish the answers, even when those answers are not favorable to the companies paying referral fees.

Third, their travel reports and redemption reviews provide genuine value. These are not sanitized hotel tours designed to make everything look perfect. They share what worked, what did not, and how to replicate their successes or avoid their mistakes.

The site maintains a careful balance. Yes, they have affiliate links, they need to keep the lights on, but those relationships do not appear to corrupt their editorial judgment. When a card has poor value or a program devaluation hurts consumers, they say so plainly.

Honorable Mentions: Danny the Deal Guru and Doctor of Credit

Both Danny the Deal Guru and Doctor of Credit deserve recognition, though they serve slightly different purposes than what I look for in a primary resource.

Doctor of Credit excels at being comprehensive and timely. If there is a new bank bonus, a data point about approval odds, or a lawsuit affecting the industry, they will cover it. Their comment sections have become valuable repositories of reader experiences that help inform decisions. However, the site can feel more like a news aggregator than a guide. You get the information, but less of the strategic thinking about how to use it.

Danny the Deal Guru has carved out a niche with daily deal alerts and practical redemption ideas. His approach is more accessible for people just getting into the hobby. The daily email format works well for staying current, though it lacks some of the depth I prefer for major decisions.

Both sites are valuable tools in the arsenal. I check them regularly. But Frequent Miler edges them out for the complete package of news, analysis, and genuine travel experiences.

The Loser: The Points Guy

The Points Guy has become a cautionary tale of what happens when a blog becomes a marketing conglomerate.

I genuinely cannot remember the last time I found useful information there that was not available elsewhere without wading through sponsored content, aggressive paywalls, and articles that read like they were written by the card issuer’s PR department.

The transformation has been stark. What began as Brian Kelly sharing legitimate strategies has morphed into a content farm optimized for search engines and affiliate revenue rather than reader value. Articles are often superficial cookie-cutter lists designed to generate clicks rather than inform decisions. The “reviews” of premium cards rarely include meaningful criticism because upsetting issuers might impact those lucrative partnership deals.

The site has also become nearly unreadable from a user experience standpoint. Paywalls block content mid-article. Advertisements overwhelm the page. Pop-ups interrupt reading. The mobile experience is particularly terrible. When I accidentally land on a TPG article from a search result, I immediately look for the same information elsewhere.

Perhaps most frustratingly, their recommendations often seem calibrated to maximize their commission rather than optimize the reader’s outcome. The cards they push hardest tend to be those with the best affiliate payouts, not necessarily the best fits for different spending patterns or travel goals.

The tragedy is that they have resources smaller blogs lack, staff writers, video production capabilities, access to industry insiders. They could create genuinely valuable content if editorial decisions were not so clearly driven by revenue optimization.

Why This Matters

The credit card and travel rewards space has become increasingly complex. Annual fees have climbed while benefits have been cut. Transfer partners change without notice. Devaluations happen overnight. Having trustworthy sources of information is more important than ever.

When a blog prioritizes affiliate revenue over editorial integrity, readers make worse decisions. They sign up for cards that do not match their spending, chase bonuses that are not actually valuable, or miss better opportunities because those opportunities do not pay the blog as well.

After two decades in this game, I have seen countless blogs launch with good intentions and then slowly compromise their standards as the money gets bigger. Frequent Miler has managed to resist that gravitational pull better than most, which is why they earn the top spot for 2025.

Your mileage may vary, of course. Different people value different things in their information sources. But if you want analysis you can trust without constantly wondering whether the recommendation serves you or the blogger’s bank account, Frequent Miler remains the gold standard.

What are your thoughts? Has your experience with these blogs been similar or different? I would be curious to hear which resources you trust and which ones you have written off.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

A quick note before we wrap up: I want to be crystal clear that I have zero affiliation with any of the blogs mentioned here. Nobody paid me, nobody asked me to write this, and I have no skin in the game beyond being someone who uses these resources regularly. This is just one traveler’s honest take on what works and what does not in 2025.

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Mastercard
mastercard.com › us › en › personal › find-a-card › credit-card › credit-type › good-credit.html
Credit Cards for Good Credit - Mastercard
Find credit cards from Mastercard for people with good credit. Compare credit cards from our partners, view offers and apply online for the card that is the best fit for you.
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American Express
americanexpress.com › us › credit-cards
Credit Cards - Compare & Apply Online - American Express
Find the best credit card by American Express for your needs. Choose between travel, cash back, rewards and more. Apply for a credit card online.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › best credit card for an everyday spender?
r/CreditCards on Reddit: Best Credit Card for an Everyday Spender?
1 week ago -

Does anyone have any recommendations for good everyday spender credit cards? I currently have the Chase Freedom Unlimited which is great for dining and the 1.5% on everything but I’m not sure how to feel. Everyone always shoves the basic choices like AMEX, Chase, CapitalOne down your face but are there any other good ones? I am a recent graduate with no debt obligations and currently live at home to save up money so really my only expenses are currently groceries, going out (dining and entertainment category), spending on tech and clothing, and then very few travel (some flights not so much hotels).

On top of this, even if there are any other better options, is it even worth canceling/opening another card?

Appreciate any guidance in advance, thanks!

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/creditcards › 2026 best cashback credit cards
r/CreditCards on Reddit: 2026 Best Cashback Credit Cards
4 days ago -

For 2025 I gave a summary of what I thought the best credit cards were, but with people posting I've learned some new things, as well as some of the offers have changed. I'm going to give an update of what I found here. I also originally had this as "my list", but now want to make it a more general list. This is specifically not calling out any bonuses that they might have, so if you're a churner this list won't be too helpful.

Some important caveats - some of these offers are no longer available, however, for overall tracking purpose I'm going to include them here. Also, some of these bonuses are only available with other qualifying actions, such as keeping 100K in account value. I know that's not achievable for everyone, but doesn't change the fact that they might be the best option.

If I've missed any please feel free to let me know - however, this list is not really for the "also rans", i.e. BoA Customized Cash offer includes 2% on groceries and wholesale clubs (3.5 if you're platinum Honors), but that is below other higher offers. Similar with Capital One Quicksilver, 1.5% as a general card falls below the 2% available at many other vendors. Aside from general cashback, anything below 5% just doesn't really cut it.

Selectable Categories - 8.25% - 2500 Per Quarter

  • BoA Customized Cash Rewards Credit Card - No Annual Fee - Chose one from(Can change a month): gas and EV charging stations; online shopping, including cable, internet, phone plans and streaming; dining; travel; drug stores and pharmacies; or home improvement and furnishings. *8.25 is for the first year with 100k+ held in BoA accounts or linked Merrill accounts and only applies for the first year, after that, you lose the promotional "+3%" and drop down to 5.25%. You can hold multiple cards

Selectable Categories - 6% - 1500 Per Quarter

  • US Bank Shopper Card (V) - $99 Annual Fee, waived for the first year - chose two from (changing on the quarter reset): AceHardware® Apple®Amazon.com®Anthropologie®Bed, Bath, & Beyond®Best Buy®Chewy.com®CrateandBarrelDisney®HomeDepot®Ikea®Kohl's®Lowe's®Lululemon®Macy'sMenards®NordstromPottery Barn®QVC®Restoration HardwareTarget®Walmart®Wayfair.comWilliams Sonoma®

Groceries - 6%

  • Aven Rewards (V) - 6% cash back on groceries up to $10K a year 0- No Annual fee

  • Blue Cash Preferred (AE) - 6% cash back on groceries up to $6K - 95 annual fee waived for the first year

Selectable Categories - 5%

  • US Bank Cash+ (V) - No Annual Fee - 2000 Per Quarter -Chose 2 from (changeable at the start of the quarter *MUST RESELECT TO GET BONUS): Fast food, Home utilities, TV, internet and streaming, Department stores, Cell phone, Electronic stores

  • Citi Custom Cash (MC) - No Annual Fee - 500 Per Month on largest category spend; can have multiple cards.

  • Max Cash Preferred (V) - No Annual Fee -2000 Per Quarter - Chose two TV and Internet & Streaming Services,Fast Food,Cell Phone Providers,Department Stores,Home Utilities,Furniture Stores,Electronic Stores,Recreation,Entertainment

Rotating Categories (Check here to see categories)- 5% - 1500 Per Quarter

  • Chase Freedom (V) - No annual fee (no longer available)

  • Chase Freedom (MC) Flex (same categories as regular Freedom) - No annual fee

  • Citi Dividend (MC) - No annual fee (no longer available)

  • Discover IT (D) - No annual fee

Set Categories - 5%

  • US Bank Ralphs (MC) - No Annual Fee - 5% digital Wallet 3000 per calendar year, 5% Kroger 3000 per calendar year -

  • PenFed (V) - 5% Gas - No annual fee (no longer available)

  • Ink Business Cash Credit Card 5% (V) - No Annual Fee - Internet Cable Phone and Office Supply Stores 25000 Per Calendar Year

  • Autograph Journeys Card (V)- 5% Hotels 4% Airlines [95$ Yearly Fee but 50$ travel credit, so ~45$]

  • AAA Daily Advantage 5% Groceries - Rewards capped at 500 per year

  • AAA Travel Advantage - 5% Gas and EV Charging - Rewards capped at 350 per year

General Cashback

  • USBank Smartly Credit Card (V) - 4% - Up to 10,000 per billing cycle *Need to either be grandfathered in to have 100k in investment, or have 100k in checking to get bonus.

  • BoA Unlimited Cash Rewards - 3.125% *For the first year, then falls to 2.625%, but both of these numbers reflect the "Platinum Bonus" of having 100k in BoA or linked Merrill Accounts, otherwise 2% first year falling to 1.5%)

  • Robinhood Gold Card - 3% - I believe 5$ a month, so 60$ a year

  • 2% - Too many to List Fidelity / Citi Double Cash® Card (MC) / Wells Fargo Active Cash® Card (V) / The American Express Blue Business Cash™ Card (50k limit) (AE) / Synchrony Premier World (MC) / Apple Card (Must use apple Pay) / PNC / NFCU

Honorable Mentions (Debit Cards)

  • Paypal Debit Card (MC) - 5% Up to 1000 per month (changeable at the start of the month *MUST RESELECT TO GET BONUS) Chose one from: Restaurants, Groceries, Fuel, Apparel, or Rideshare/Transit.

  • Schwab Debit (V) - All ATM Transaction Fees Refunded

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Yahoo! Finance
finance.yahoo.com › personal finance › credit cards
Best rewards credit cards forJanuary 2026: Maximize your everyday spending
2 weeks ago - Why we like it: Like many of our top cards, the Citi Strata Premier is a great option for saving money on the things you buy regularly at home to put toward a future trip. It offers unlimited 3x rewards across four common rewards categories. Even among the best rewards credit cards, many only offer that much in two or three categories, while others with higher earning rates typically cap the amount of rewards you can earn annually.
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Discover
discover.com › credit-cards
Apply for a Credit Card Online from Discover
Discover it® Secured Credit Card: build your credit history with responsible use3 · Discover it® Student Cash Back: students earn rewards on purchases · Discover it® Chrome for Students: students earn rewards for eligible gas station and restaurant purchases · NHL® Discover it®: rep your favorite team while earning rewards · The best first credit card will typically be one that’s meant for someone new to credit to help them responsibly manage and use credit for the first time.
Address   2500 Lake Cook Road, 60015, Riverwoods
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Bankrate
bankrate.com › global › credit cards › advertiser disclosure category pages
Best Credit Cards of January 2026 | Bankrate
2 weeks ago - Purchases I make at Whole Foods fuel my next Amazon purchase.” – Steve Dashiell, Bankrate credit cards editor Alternatives: Consider the Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards credit card’s online shopping category if you regularly browse on sites other than Amazon.com. ... It has plenty of bonus categories that cover many everyday expenses. This card doesn’t charge foreign transaction fees and earns rewards on Chase Travel purchases, making it a good cash back travel card. ... You need to maintain an eligible Prime membership to get the best cash back rates with this card.